Christopher
Phillips (Class of ’00, M.A. Humanities External Degree)
has captured the attention of The Christian Science Monitor
and Time magazine with his two books, Socrates Café and
the new Six Questions of Socrates, as well as for his ever-growing
international web of philosophy discussion groups, Socrates
Café.

Phillips
said he looked around and saw the impasse between political parties,
between countries, between adherents of differing religions. He
saw the problems arising because of it. Then he looked at ancient
civilizations, especially the Greeks, and made the comparison—and
from that he developed a philosophy about it.
“In Greece, that great civilization broke down not from outside
sources, but from within. It broke down because of lack of communication,
because of lack of dialogue, the kinds of dialogue initiated by
Socrates and the other great philosophers from that time. I see
the same things now.

“I
thought about it. I can either complain about it or try to do something
about it. I’m trying to do something about it.”

What
Phillips—whose original family name, he said, was Philipous
until it was arbitrarily changed as his family members were processed
through Ellis Island in 1922—did was return to Greece; philosophically,
by adopting the Socratic methods and Socratic teachings, and literally,
by returning to the agora, the area of Athens where Socrates posed
his philosophy questions to anyone who would listen, and posed them
again.

Socrates’
six basic questions, as listed in Plato’s Dialogues, are:
What is virtue? What is moderation? What is justice? What is courage?
What is good? What is Piety? By adopting the street-level approach
to philosophical dialog, Phillips ended up with two results: He
founded the Society for Philosophical Inquiry, which gave rise to
the Socrates Café, and he authored the two books.

In
his world travels while establishing Socrates Café chapters,
asking his questions of ordinary and extraordinary people alike,
and touring with his books, Phillips said in his statement about
Six Questions of Socrates he “found surprising ideological
similarities between peoples and cultures that are—at least
geographically—very distant from each other. In maximum-security
prisons and schools, in places that have seen some of the most tragic
human-rights protests in recent history, and in the agora of Athens.”
He also saw “links between Western thought and the rich experiences
and traditions of peoples far removed from the ‘canon’
of academic philosophy.”

Phillips
said in a story written by The Christian Science Monitor in March
that he abandoned philosophy as a major because so many instructors
“spoke in monotone voices, read from prepared texts and took
umbrage at questions.”

However,
he told Dateline, “I had one instructor, Ben Mijuskovic, adjunct
professor of philosophy, who was my thesis advisor, who was inspirational,
encouraging and supporting, non-threatening. Studying with him was
a good experience. In fact, the master’s I got at Cal State
Dominguez Hills was my best [Phillips has three master’s degrees.
The one from Dominguez Hills was his third] because it was rigorous,
exacting and it made me think deeply.”

In
fact, Phillips said, “The thesis I wrote for my degree at
Dominguez served as a template for my scholarly writing for the
general public," meaning the books Socrates Café and
Six Questions of Socrates.

The
Web site for the Society of Philosophical Inquiry is http://www.philosopher.org.